Will there be another quarterback addition on scholarship still this summer? Marc Weiszer and Fletcher Page of the Athens Banner-Herald discuss in the latest Bulldog Bytes Virginia graduate transfer Greyson Lambert and what the Bulldogs are doing at the position.

We pick up on our opponent previews with Patrick Brown of the Chattanooga Times-Free Press. He gives us a rundown of Tennessee.

A little more than a half hour after coveted McEachern defensive tackle Julian Rochester posted on his Twitter page Thursday night that he committed to Georgia, Mark Richt tweeted his own not-so-subtle expression of glee about the get with a tweet that included this hashtag: #homeGrown.

The Bulldogs coaching staff is hauling in recruits with a theme of locking down the borders of the state.

DESTIN, Fla. | The Southeastern Conference isn’t budging on its opposition to an early signing period for football.

That was the message the league sent out of its spring meetings here as conferences weigh in on a recommendation from a task force by the Collegiate Commissioners Association for a three-day period starting Dec. 16, the third Wednesday of that month

“As a league, we are where we always have been,” commissioner Mike Slive said.

DESTIN, Fla. | Football coaches Mark Richt from Georgia and Steve Spurrier of South Carolina battle in the Southeastern Conference East Division, but both made a toast at a reception here Tuesday night to Mike Slive.

Spurrier joked he was the best SEC commissioner since Roy Kramer, his predecessor.

All kidding aside, the SEC spring meetings at the Sandestin Beach Hilton are a curtain call for Slive before his retirement at the end of July.

DESTIN, Fla. | As football coaches headed home after two days at the SEC spring meetings, they said they are ready to take part in their own satellite camps if the SEC’s position to ban them isn’t adopted nationally.

“We’ll do it, I promise you, all summer next year,” LSU coach Les Miles said. “Next year, we’ll be in all different locations.”

DESTIN, Fla. | Big increases in coaching salaries and the addition of more off-field support staff has spending on Georgia’s football program rising significantly for the new fiscal year that starts in July.

Georgia’s budget for football will increase 35.66 percent from $17,275,044 to $23,434,888, according to figures presented to the UGA Athletic Association board of directors last week.

Compensation and monthly payroll totals increased from $7,810,479 to $10,732,324.